Boyd C. Paulson

Stanford University

Papers

5

Total Citations

271

H-Index

3

About

Boyd C. Paulson was a pioneering researcher at the intersection of construction engineering, automation, and computer-integrated design, whose work helped lay the intellectual foundation for modern digital construction practices. Working primarily through the 1980s, Paulson tackled one of the construction industry's most persistent challenges: fragmentation. His most influential paper, "Computer Integration: Reducing Fragmentation in AEC Industry" (1989), garnered 170 citations and argued compellingly that emerging computer technologies could unify the dispersed data, design decisions, and expertise shared among architects, engineers, and contractors — a vision that anticipates today's Building Information Modeling paradigm. Equally forward-thinking was his early exploration of automation and robotics on large-scale construction sites. His 1985 paper on the subject (92 citations) examined real-time data acquisition, process control, and robotics for field operations, a remarkably prescient contribution given how central these technologies have since become. Paulson further extended this work into artificial intelligence, investigating how autonomous robotic construction agents might navigate complex knowledge environments. Taken together, his research established a coherent vision of a smarter, more integrated construction industry decades before such ideas entered mainstream practice.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

3
H-Index
5
Papers
271
Total Citations
54
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Computer Integration: Reducing Fragmentation in AEC Industry
170 citations · 1989
📈 Most Prolific Year: 1989 (3 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 6
🏛 Institutions: Stanford University

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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